If you urgently need medication, contact your prescriber immediately to arrange for a prescription.

If you urgently need medication, contact your prescriber immediately to arrange a prescription. If this isn't possible, you may be able to get medicine from a pharmacist in an emergency, subject to certain conditions.

You must have been prescribed the medicine before by a doctor, dentist, nurse independent prescriber, optometrist independent prescriber or other healthcare professional, who is registered in the UK. In addition to this, the pharmacist:

will usually need to see you face-to-face

must agree that you need the medicine immediately

will usually need evidence that you have been prescribed that medicine before

must be satisfied with the dose that is most appropriate for you to take

The pharmacist may provide an emergency supply of up to 30 days' treatment for most prescription medicines, with these exceptions:

insulin, an ointment, a cream or an asthma inhaler – the smallest pack size

the contraceptive pill – a full treatment cycle

liquid oral antibiotics – the smallest quantity to provide a full course of treatment

permitted controlled medicines (controlled drugs) – up to five days' treatment. Permitted controlled medicines include a very limited range of medicines, such as those for epilepsy (phenobarbital). Many commonly used controlled medicines such as morphine or diamorphine can't be supplied without a prescription by a pharmacist in an emergency

The pharmacist will then make a note in their prescription book of:

your name and address

the nature of the emergency

the date of the emergency supply

the name, quantity, form (e.g. capsules, tablets or liquid) and strength of the medicine

Even if the pharmacist is unable to give you an emergency supply of a medicine, they will advise you on how to obtain any essential medical care you may need.

Is it an NHS service?

No. Supplying medicine in an emergency is a private service that is not funded by the NHS, meaning that pharmacists can charge for it. The charge will vary, depending on the medicine and the pharmacist's policy.

Getting your medicine or a prescription

You may be able to get your medicine or a prescription in one of the following ways:

seeing a local GP and asking for a prescription. Staff at an NHS walk-in centre may be able to arrange for you to see a GP

asking a local pharmacist if they can provide an emergency supply of your medicine

in some cases, a nurse at an NHS walk-in centre may be able to supply your medicine or a prescription

outside normal GP hours, you may be able to get a prescription from an out-of-hours service

Visitors to the UK

If you are a visitor to the UK, you may be able to get an emergency supply of medicine from a pharmacist:

at your request, if there is evidence that a doctor or dentist registered in a European Economic Area (EEA) country or Switzerland has prescribed the medicine for you before

at the request of a doctor or dentist registered in the EEA or Switzerland

if you have a valid prescription from a doctor or dentist registered in the EEA or Switzerland

However, this arrangement is not applicable to medicines prescribed by other EEA or Swiss healthcare professionals, such as nurses, and it doesn't apply to all medicines. For example, pharmacists can't provide an emergency supply of:

controlled medicines

medicines that don't have a UK marketing authorisation

In addition to this, the pharmacist may not be able to provide an emergency supply of medication if the prescription is written in a language they can't understand.

It is illegal for pharmacists to supply medicines based on prescriptions issued outside the UK, the EEA or Switzerland. This includes prescriptions issued by doctors in the US and Canada.